|  | Posted by Mike C on 02/22/07 00:27 
On Feb 21, 1:06 pm, Dave Garrett <d...@compassnet.com> wrote:> In article <1172082747.145722.304...@h3g2000cwc.googlegroups.com>,
 > michaelj...@hotmail.com says...
 >
 >
 >
 > > On Feb 20, 6:51 pm, "Stuart" <stuart=E2=82...@whodunnit8.com> wrote:
 > > > "Mike C" <michaelj...@hotmail.com> wrote in message
 >
 > > >news:1171984828.176180.74080@l53g2000cwa.googlegroups.com...
 > > > >I have had a hard time putting .avi on a DVD. A hard time meaning I
 > > > > can do it, but the re-encoding takes forever. What I have been doing,
 > > > > and it works great is use Nero to put the .AVI to a Video CD. They
 > > > > work fine in my player and can be generated in a matter of minutes.
 >
 > > > > My question is, is there a similar way to quickly put multiple avi
 > > > > files on a DVD to play on a newer dvd player?  The way I figure it,
 > > > > most TV shows in AVI format (w/o commercials) are around 350MB. Than
 > > > > means I should be able to fit at least 10-15 on a DVD.
 >
 > > > There are 2 ways you can approach this task
 > > > 1. simply burn the avi files as DATA on to a DVCD-R or +R and then you can
 > > > play it in any modern DVD player that is DivX or Xvid capable.
 >
 > > > or
 >
 > > > 2. Author a DVD using programs like NeroVisionExpress or my favourite for
 > > > this type of episodic compilation VSO ConvertXtoDVD. Simply add each file=
 > >  as
 > > > a separate title and away you go - on my system a 3 hour compilation takes
 > > > about 1 hour 10 minutes to complete. ConvertXtoDVD allows for a simple bmp
 > > > or jpg backdrop for the menu and you can select chapters based on a every=
 > >  x
 > > > minutes etc.
 >
 > > Burning the .avi files as data to the DVD didn't work. My DVD player
 > > must not support Divx. I might just get a new one since they are so
 > > cheap now (cheaper to buy a new DVD player than the software to create
 > > compatible DVDs).
 >
 > You don't have to buy any software, there's freeware/shareware out there
 > that will convert AVI files to MPEG-2 files and author a DVD for you.
 > VideoHelp.com has lots of info on various conversions, but this one:
 >
 > http://forum.videohelp.com/viewtopic.php?t=298122
 >
 > is specific to one of the easier-to-use conversion utilities, Avi2DVD.
 > You can ignore the parts concerning subtitles and menus if you don't
 > plan to create those for your DVD.
 >
 > It does take quite a long time (and pretty much maxes out your CPU) to
 > do these kinds of conversions, especially if you have an older computer.
 > I just converted a 1.3GB AVI this weekend using Avi2DVD; the result was
 > a 4.2GB DVD-R that plays just fine in my DVD player. The conversion and
 > authoring took 19 1/2 hours with an AMD Athlon 1700XP CPU and 1GB of
 > RAM; burning to DVD-R using Nero took another hour or so.
 >
 > Dave
 
 I installed AvitoDVD. As far as I can see, it allows you to select
 one .AVI, not multiple as input.
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